below: At the corner of Mt Pleasant and Davisville stands the sculpture ‘Wind Bird’ by Sorel Etrog. Etrog (1933-1914) was a Canadian artist, writer and sculptor.

I have passed this little figure many times and today I finally decided to take some pictures of it and make a walk of it. I have always thought that she was a forlorn little creature. With her arms outstretched, empty, reaching for something that never appears. She needs a hug or at least a warm scarf to keep the chill away.

below: After leaving Wind Bird empty handed yet again, I walked west towards Yonge Street. Off the street and amongst some trees I saw this sculpture. It is one that I have never noticed before. A collection of metal pieces is suspended from the top of a lopsided metal frame, more parallelogram than rectangle.

below: On closer inspection, the metal bits are actually flat human forms with their heads in the center and feet flung outwards as if spinning around a central axis. I know enough physics to know that either centrifugal force or centripetal forces (or both) are at play here. But I don’t know enough to know the right answer.

below: Next door are these two metal shapes. There isn’t much to it, is there? What it does have is it’s own little park area and walkway. I didn’t have to get my shoes muddy if I wanted to get closer.

below: There is a path that ran on the west side of the above building, 141 Davisville, to Balliol Street. This tall sculpture stands beside the path. I am not sure who the artist is. Is it a couple embracing? Or a totem pole of abstract forms? Or just something that looked good to the artist’s eye?

below: Next, from across Balliol, this sculpture caught my eye. It is ‘Grand Odalisque’ by Sorel Etrog.

below: I’m rarely satisfied with photos taken of public art in front of buildings. The background is always to cluttered or messy. I played with various angles for ‘Grand Odalisque’ and I found this one. The sculpture is quite phallic now that I look at it.

The phallic nature of the sculpture is possibly ironic . Odalisque has a few meanings and connotations, but all involve women. In fact, ‘La Grande Odalisque’ is a famous painting by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres in 1814. In French, ‘grande’ is the feminine form of the adjective and ‘grand’ is the masculine. Ingres used ‘grande’ for his female nude and Etrog used ‘grand’ for his sculpture. Is there a connection? Or just my imagination?

below: La Grande Odalisque. You’ll have to visit the Louvre in Paris if you want to see the painting.

The next stop along Davisville was the Al Green Sculpture Garden. Al Green was a builder, a founder of Greenrock Property Management, and in later life a sculptor. It makes sense then that the small garden that bears his name, and is home to some of his sculptures, is between two of Greenrock’s apartment buildings.

below: ‘Leaning Torso’ by Al Green.

below: ‘Embrace’ by Al Green

below: ‘Landing Sculpture’ by Carl Lander (aka Carl Bucher), 1970. They look like little red spaceships hovering in the air, or as the name suggests, coming in for landing. Father and son alien ships come for a visit.
Lander (1935-2015) was a Swiss artist who lived in Canada for a couple of years in the early 1970s.

below: Another sculpture by Sorel Etrog in the foreground. Behind it is ‘Greenwin’ by Maryon Kantaroff, commissioned in 1973 by Greenwin Developments.

And last, and very definitely least….

below: You tell me. Christmas balls on top of a fence?

below: Once you’ve figured out the whys and the wherefores of the above, you’ll be happy to know that there is another mystery. A bagel? A donut? Squirrel food? Bird food? But also a ring?
These are on the fence that runs between Yonge St and the subway line near Davisville station.